Monday, October 15, 2018

'Toon Reviews 22: Animaniacs Vol 2 Part 9: Clown and Out/Bubba Bo Bob Brain


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Episode 34
Clown and Out

Being antic-driven characters, the Warners’ approaches to life are much more creative and entertaining than normal.  One such approach is reacting to their fears.  Here, Wakko deals with someone people either find funny or creepy, clowns. 
This particular clown is modeled after the comedian this show loves targeting, Jerry Lewis.  Thaddeus Plotz hires the clown to perform for Wakko’s birthday. Before the clown gets to the water tower, we see what we’re in for.  Like Jerry Lewis, he speaks in a childish tone, and frequently talks at the top of his lungs including the comedian’s brand of nonsense words.  He’s also very in everyone’s face with his acts causing discomfort.  His attempts at calming them down with sappy nonsense songs often fail to help.  The clown’s creepy factors are made so clear, even Plotz is freaked out by him.  There is some comfort to the clown’s introduction when Dr. Scratchansniff tells Plotz that fearing clowns is perfectly normal.  The moment also foreshadows what’s to come as Dr. Scratchansniff explains that Wakko has the biggest fear of clowns of all. 
Regarding the clown’s full personality, while he is annoying, there’s one surprising trait to him.  He’s actually endearing with the pain of what he’s ultimately put through made sympathetic mostly from his childish tone of voice.  This makes the gags of how Wakko fights back bring a wide range of feels.  The gags themselves are executed hilariously, but it’s easy to feel bad for the clown at the same time.  That’s not easy to pull off successfully.  Normally when someone who means no harm endures pain, it would be hard to find it funny.  However, the humor of the gags works because of the nature of clowns, especially when they appear before someone who’s scared of them.  I believe Wakko’s reaction to a loud, creepy looking-clown appearing at his door is accurate to how people in real life would approach the scenario. 
Some gags are creative like asking the clown to make a balloon cannon that blows up at him, or having the clown drive through a backdrop of the water tower in a tiny car.  These and simpler gags like slamming the door on the clown or having him fall off the tower are capped by his pathetic childish matter-of-fact statements.  It’s these moments where the clown getting hurt is funny and sympathetic all at once especially show. 
By the time the clown’s in realistic-looking pain with bandages and crutches, the cartoon is in danger of becoming too mean-spirited.  Fortunately, the ending works everything out.  Wakko sends the clown into space to stop what’s been scaring him from coming once and for all.  However, he also gets some punishment for harming a clown who meant well by joining Plotz for a therapy session from Dr. Scratchansniff.  It’s also pleasing that the clown ends up content in a place that likes his acts, Mars, inhabited by baby multi-colored Marvin the Martians.  It shows that while many people fear clowns, there is an accepting audience for them out there, making things not so black and white. 
This is why the cartoon works for what it is.  It gives a hilarious display of how feared clowns are, while also showing that they have feelings too with the ending being appropriate for both sides of the conflict.  It’s a fleshed out point of view making for a great mix of sympathy and comedy.
A+
Bubba Bo Bob Brain


Even when going through the motions, Pinky and the Brain almost always turn out top-notch material.  This is a formula where no matter what you do with the characters, everything works.  These characters can be placed in anything imaginable.  With the creative possibilities this open, many cartoons go all out with setups, and this one does it the best.  It’s an ingenious mix of science with any random thing. 
Brain plans to use the power of subliminal messages, or quick messages only picked up by the subconscious, to have the world make him the leader.  The cartoon gets creative when Brain notices the popular trend of country music.  Ultimately, he turns to country music to get his subliminal messages across. 
Through it all, there’s a clash of views and approaches to the rural music art.  Pinky feels right at home with the music, genuinely enjoying it right at the start, and knowing it takes time to become a star.  This contrasts with Brain who acts smart, but doesn’t really get how rising to country music stardom works.  Brain views country music as a logical plan to follow, making for an out-of-the-ordinary perspective.  This results in Brain looking ridiculous as a tiny mouse on abnormally tall skinny stilts prone to walking into doorways. 
Even his song lacks any creative spark.  It’s very blunt about who he is and his goals, and only has a few verses.  This is a dull unpassionate approach to something as lively as country music, but that’s what makes the cartoon so fascinating and entertaining.  It’s noteworthy that someone lacking the spirit of country music to make it so big.
With his subliminal message, Brain instantly becomes a huge star from his first performance in Nashville.  It’s funny to watch Brain in the country music environment.  He doesn’t even try to act like the rest of this music’s crowd, often remaining his old intellectual self no one understands before feebly uttering a country idiom. 
The standout instance of this is when he’s on a talk show, and remarks how puberty was “inordinately kind” to a woman interviewing him.  It’s a huge intellectual, not to mention risqué, remark that no one gets, but Brain is still at the top of the country music world easily.  With his subliminal message in mind, the whole cartoon impresses that Brain comes this close to world domination. 
As for the obligatory failure, it’s by far the strongest instance of the belief that maybe Brain isn’t smart enough to take over the world.  Throughout the cartoon, Pinky keeps saying Brain’s performer name, Bubba Bo Bob Brain, wrong while praising him.  Any logical person would ignore this and let Pinky enjoy himself.  However, Brain keeps letting the harmless mispronunciations bother him and never lets it go.  When he’s one performance away from achieving his goals and Pinky says his name wrong, Brain gets fed up and tells Pinky to forget his name after playing the subliminal message.  The audience hears Brain shout that, and his high status is gone.  It never ceases to amaze how the plans fail from Brain’s insight more often than the suggested factor of Pinky’s lack of intelligence.  It’s an intriguing twist. 
In fact, just about every factor of this cartoon makes for an inventive entertainingly-executed setup and is a testament to Pinky and the Brain’s appeal…Y’all.
A+

Cartoon Ranking
  1. Chairman of the Bored
  2. Hot Bothered and Bedeviled
  3. Bubba Bo Bob Brain
  4. O Silly Mio
  5. Phranken-Runt
  6. Clown and Out
  7. Jockey For Position
  8. Sir Yaksalot
  9. Potty Emergency
  10. Puttin’ on the Blitz
  11. The Big Kiss
  12. Draculee Draculaa
  13. Babblin’ Bijou
  14. I Got Yer Can
  15. Astro-Buttons
  16. Moby or Not Moby
  17. Noah’s Lark
  18. Skullhead Boneyhands
  19. The Good, the Boo, and the Ugly
  20. Hiccup
  21. Moon Over Minerva
  22. Mesozoic Mindy

Miscellaneous Ranking
  1. Testimonials
  2. Cartoons in Wakko’s Body
  3. You Risk Your Life
  4. The Great Wakkorotti: The Summer Concert

Song Ranking
  1. The Planets
The next Animaniacs review is on a very special episode where much of the cast is mixed up in an Animaniacs Stew.
Next time on MC Toon Reviews is an OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes episode "Back in Red Action."
If you would like to check out other Animaniacs reviews on this blog, click here for the guide made especially for them.

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